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Richard Sachs Cycles
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Thanks, Richard. That's it. just "Thanks" - Garro.
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
i fired my coach years ago. he wanted me to eat pork.
Nick Crumpton
crumptoncycles.com
Instagram
"Tradition is a guide, not a jailer" —Justin Robinson
"Mastery before Creativity"—Nicholas Crumpton 2021
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Steve Hampsten
www.hampsten.blogspot.com
“Maybe chairs shouldn’t be comfortable. At some point, you want your guests to leave.”
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Originally Posted by
hampco
why red?
would you regard red as your corporate colour?
Yes. In 1982, the very first year I sponsored a team, Le Coq Sportif supplied outfits. The kit was red and white. I painted the bicycles to match. Period. Le Coq moved on in 1983, and we never looked back. The team bicycles and 99% of my client’s orders have been for the red and white scheme ever since. The red paint has evolved through the years. For a period the decal art ink changed from yellow to white and back to yellow several times. The white paint, which was once a reflective white hue was changed to off-white about 4-5 seasons ago.
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Originally Posted by
anthonymaietta
Richard,
ATYO what are the 5 most important advancements in the handbuilt frame world since you started building?
Tony
these have kept the niche alive as well as from falling off the edge of the earth -
bike messengers
forums
flickr
nahbs
relentlessness
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
ATMO is Hemmingway in steel and flux.
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
.....
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
As Steve put it, Thanks Richard.
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Richard,
ATYO what are the 5 most important advancements in the handbuilt frame world since you started building?
Tony
Anthony Maietta
Web Site |
Blog |
Flickr
"The person who says it can not be done, should not interrupt the person doing it."
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
As I thumbed thru the photos as they slowly loaded on my iPhone, an eclectic song built to it's finale on the alternative rock station.
Oddly this musical narration brought an interesting clarity to the story.
Thanks Richard, I'm happy for you.
Jake
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
So, where now? tubing? lugs/castings? any thoughts of opening the queue? one foot in front of the other? how is the new pad? - Garro.
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Originally Posted by
steve garro
So, where now? tubing? lugs/castings? any thoughts of opening the queue? one foot in front of the other? how is the new pad? - Garro.
any long-term plans, or will you continue to make richard sachs steel frames until you retire?
Folks will laugh, but the truth is I have very little ambition. I got into this framebuilding gig by complete serendipity. I was unprepared for the task. When Peter and I were asked to make Witcomb USA frames in Connecticut because the family in London was unable to supply our boss with product, I felt unprepared for the task. When I got fed up with my boss and set up my business in late 1975, I was unprepared for the task. Before too long, I was taking orders and making bicycles and never, ever felt as if I had the complete and proper training. So much of what I do is seat of the pants and intuitive. I’ve never seen anyone else make frames from end to end since I left England in 1973. And by the time I got up a head of steam as a commercial framebuilder, nothing – not a single task – resembled what I saw or did abroad. I am routinely confounded by the process. The lack of confidence or the deeply rooted feeling that, since I am self-taught, something is missing – this is an emotion that envelopes every working day I have and every frame I build. Because of this simple fact that I am never completely content with what passes as a finished bicycle, I continue to come in every Monday to see if I can redeem myself for all my past gaffes, miscues, and blunders. It sounds so drama queen-esque typing out these words, but this is how I feel. If it ever changes, maybe the word “retire” can be used in a sentence. For now, I have 7 years worth of work in which to see if I can possibly get it nailed.
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
richard-
you employ"traditional handbuilding methods"....how have your bikes evolved in relation to changes in components, threadless headsets, shallow bars, 8 degree stems, etc. etc,... i look at modern race bikes and see that for the most part people sit on a racing bike the same way- but the bikes are dramatically different....how do you keep metal bikes relevant and competitive at the highest level of sport in a plastic world?
thanks!
craig
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Originally Posted by
e-RICHIE
any long-term plans, or will you continue to make richard sachs steel frames until you retire?
Folks will laugh, but the truth is I have very little ambition. I got into this framebuilding gig by complete serendipity. I was unprepared for the task. When Peter and I were asked to make Witcomb USA frames in Connecticut because the family in London was unable to supply our boss with product, I felt unprepared for the task. When I got fed up with my boss and set up my business in late 1975, I was unprepared for the task. Before too long, I was taking orders and making bicycles and never, ever felt as if I had the complete and proper training. So much of what I do is seat of the pants and intuitive. I’ve never seen anyone else make frames from end to end since I left England in 1973. And by the time I got up a head of steam as a commercial framebuilder, nothing – not a single task – resembled what I saw or did abroad. I am routinely confounded by the process. The lack of confidence or the deeply rooted feeling that, since I am self-taught, something is missing – this is an emotion that envelopes every working day I have and every frame I build. Because of this simple fact that I am never completely content with what passes as a finished bicycle, I continue to come in every Monday to see if I can redeem myself for all my past gaffes, miscues, and blunders. It sounds so drama queen-esque typing out these words, but this is how I feel. If it ever changes, maybe the word “retire” can be used in a sentence. For now, I have 7 years worth of work in which to see if I can possibly get it nailed.
If you lived your life over again, would it be frame building or some other endeavor? No need to answer if it's too personal. I tend to be a reflective, introspective type!
Last edited by syntax22; 01-10-2011 at 08:39 PM.
Reason: syntax
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Re: Richard Sachs Cycles
Originally Posted by
syntax22
If you lived your life over again, would it be frame building or some other endeavor? No need to answer if it's too personal. I tend to be a reflective, introspective type!
i would live this life over in spades atmo but only if it began on the same day.
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